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Saturday, September 26, 2009
Larry Kudlow :: Townhall.com Columnist
Kevin Warsh Is on the Money
by Larry Kudlow
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Attendees of the G-20 meeting in Pittsburgh and members of the Federal Reserve Board in Washington should carefully read a Wall Street Journal op-ed by Fed Governor Kevin Warsh. In a piece titled "The Fed's Job Is Only Half Over," the former Wall Street investment banker sends a shot across the global economic bow. He says the Fed's job will not be done until it removes the easy-money policies put in place over the past year. In other words, an exit strategy.

Warsh writes that "policy likely will need to begin normalization before it is obvious that it is necessary, possibly with greater force than is customary." He's saying the Fed must be tougher, and act sooner, if it is to avoid an inflationary bubble reminiscent of the 2002-06 period, or for that matter the 1970s.

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Appointed by President George W. Bush in 2006, Warsh may be the only real supply-sider at the central bank. And while he doesn't explicitly talk about the profligate surge of fiscal spending and borrowing by the Obama administration and its international counterparts, it's not hard to infer that he's talking about that, as well.

But back to monetary policy. Warsh says the Fed should not obsess about backward-looking indicators, like gross domestic product and yesterday's inflation readings. Instead, he argues that the central bank should track forward- looking signs of growth and inflation by paying careful attention to financial markets, asset prices and risk premiums.

In essence, Warsh is opting for a market-price rule that presumably tracks commodities (including gold), bond markets, the dollar exchange rate and various credit-risk spreads in the fixed-income area. He's moving away from the Philips Curve and the idea that the Fed should target an unemployment-inflation tradeoff -- which is all Ben Bernanke ever seems to talk about.

Since the unemployment rate is a hopelessly lagging indicator, the inflation forces will be well out of the barn by the time it starts dropping significantly. But Warsh knows that markets flash signs of the future. So rather than drive by watching the rearview mirror, he wants the central bank to look through the front windshield.

Warsh was a senior White House official under President Bush, and he had a hand in the supply-side tax cuts on investment that were enacted in 2003. But it sounds like he learned a lot about the Fed's cheap-money policies at the time. Those policies drove down the dollar for years and resurrected inflation, and they're what killed the incentive effects of the Bush tax cuts and their positive effects on economic growth.

The subsequent housing and commodity bubbles -- including the massive energy shock -- utterly doomed the economy. The Fed took tiny, one-quarter-of-a-point steps over a period of four years in an attempt to reclaim anti-inflation normalcy. But the policy failed dismally. So now Warsh seems to be saying: Let's not make the same mistake again. Let's take strong, large steps to raise the target rate and drain excess cash from the economy. Continued...

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About The Author

Lawrence Kudlow is host of CNBC's Kudlow & Company

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Hey quiet please
Don't talk about economics. I'm busy being enlightened by the Progressives. It's kinda tingly isn't it?

TruLib
Don't hold your breath - I don't see major "pain" moves coming anytime soon. Heck, read Bernanke's essay!
He believes these errors caused or increased the pain of the Depression -
1. Monetary Policy Was Overly Tight at the Outset of the Great Depression. To Avoid Another Depression, We Must Keep Interest Rates Close to Zero As Long As Possible. (In Depression, Fed raised discount rate to 6% with no signs of inflation, collapsing the market.)
2. Bernanke believes that nearly all policy blunders by Congress and the Fed during the Great Depression were driven by a single misguided goal — to protect the dollar by defending its underlying gold reserves.
But that policy, according to Bernanke, had devastating unintended consequences, causing foreign countries to move to protect reserves, raise their own rates, and speed up the depression.
3. In one of his most important papers, published in October of 1990 — "The Gold Standard, Deflation and Financial Crisis In the Great Depression: An International Comparison" — Bernanke puts all the cards on the table from his years of studying the Great Depression, with the following two conclusions ...
• Supporting the dollar via the direct and indirect actions taken to vigorously defend the gold standard was the single most important factor causing the Great Depression. And ...
• The sooner a country abandoned the gold standard during the Great Depression — and effectively devalued its currency —the faster the economic recovery.
So, bet on this: Warsh notwithstanding, Bernanke will to NOTHING to support the dollar, and will not act on inflation until he is absolutely certain we are in an inflationary recovery.
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